Persona non grata : a memoir of disenchantment with the Cuban revolution / Jorge Edwards ; translated by Andrew Hurley ; preface by Octavio Paz

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Nation Books , 1993, c1973.Description: xvi, 294 p. ; 24 cmUniform titles:
  • Persona non grata . English
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • LAS 92 EDW
Summary: This mordant, ironic memoir by Chilean diplomat/novelist Edwards was the first critical evaluation of Cuba by a left-wing Latin American intellectual and caused a scandal among Western Leftists when it appeared in 1973. Appointed by the Allende government in 1970, Edwards was Chile's first diplomatic representative to Cuba. Though he spent just three and a half months on the island, he became aware of both an increased repression of intellectuals and also of the growing failure of the moral incentives of socialism. His meetings with Castro were not reassuring. While Edwards's account of kibitzing with the Cuban leader on a golf course is amusing, their final session--beginning just before midnight and lasting three hours and 20 minutes on the eve of Edwards's departure--is disturbing. Castro declared him ``a person hostile to the Cuban Revolution'' and dismissed ``bourgeois intellectuals'' saying, ``I'd a thousand times rather Allende had sent us a miner than a writer.''
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Latin American Studies Biblioteca Pública de San Miguel de Allende, A.C. LAS 92 EDW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 054472

This mordant, ironic memoir by Chilean diplomat/novelist Edwards was the first critical evaluation of Cuba by a left-wing Latin American intellectual and caused a scandal among Western Leftists when it appeared in 1973. Appointed by the Allende government in 1970, Edwards was Chile's first diplomatic representative to Cuba. Though he spent just three and a half months on the island, he became aware of both an increased repression of intellectuals and also of the growing failure of the moral incentives of socialism. His meetings with Castro were not reassuring. While Edwards's account of kibitzing with the Cuban leader on a golf course is amusing, their final session--beginning just before midnight and lasting three hours and 20 minutes on the eve of Edwards's departure--is disturbing. Castro declared him ``a person hostile to the Cuban Revolution'' and dismissed ``bourgeois intellectuals'' saying, ``I'd a thousand times rather Allende had sent us a miner than a writer.''

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